By the way, I mentioned, yesterday that of the total of 54 posts you have made to OSNews, every last one of them has been cheerleading for Opera, which somewhat compromises your credibility on the topic. However, I should probably update that figure to 65 posts, every last one of them cheerleading for Opera. That as of the time of this post. You seem to be in the middle of another posting binge, Opera fanboy.

A technically inclined site where the Firefox cheerleading doesn't come from just from the crowd but the article posters.

It's actually the major reason I hardly visit and moreso hardly post on this site anymore: the ridiculous level of can-do-no-wrong cheerleading that goes for Mozilla here is beyond the pale. Now it appears to be more and more added with negativity towards - in particular - Opera.

Those stats are for ONE SITE, w3schools.com, which is a hobbyist "web design tutorial" site.

StatCounter, on the other hand, is known for being more accurate.

For example, the 3% market share figure for Opera matches what you get if you compare the 40 million Opera users to the total number of desktop users online (about 1.4 billion according to Internet World Stats). So Opera has 3% worldwide, and in Europe it has nearly 10%, and more than Chrome and Safari combined.

Also, how about trying to address my points instead of those pathetic personal attacks?

Those stats are for ONE SITE, w3schools.com, which is a hobbyist "web design tutorial" site.

Developer site, actually. And in case you haven't noticed, it has thus far been a notably good leading indicator of what trends we can expect to see on more general sites. And it says that Opera is #7 and falling.

Face it, Opera fanboy. Opera is on its way out. It's dying. That's why Opera Software has shifted from competing on features and quality, to lobbying for direct government intervention on their behalf.